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README.md | ||
resholve-package.nix | ||
resholve.nix |
Using resholve's Nix API
resholve converts bare executable references in shell scripts to absolute
paths. This will hopefully make its way into the Nixpkgs manual soon, but
until then I'll outline how to use the resholvePackage
function.
Fair warning: resholve does not aspire to resolving all valid Shell scripts. It depends on the OSH/Oil parser, which aims to support most (but not all) Bash. resholve aims to be a ~90% sort of solution.
API Concepts
The main difference between resholvePackage
and other builder functions
is the solutions
attrset, which describes which scripts to resolve and how.
Each "solution" (k=v pair) in this attrset describes one resholve invocation.
NOTE: For most shell packages, one invocation will probably be enough:
- Packages with a single script will only need one solution.
- Packages with multiple scripts can still use one solution if the scripts don't require conflicting directives.
- Packages with scripts that require conflicting directives can use multiple solutions to resolve the scripts separately, but produce a single package.
Basic Example
Here's a simple example from one of my own projects, with annotations:
{ stdenv, lib, resholvePackage, fetchFromGitHub, bashup-events44, bashInteractive_5, doCheck ? true, shellcheck }:
resholvePackage rec {
pname = "shellswain";
version = "unreleased";
src = fetchFromGitHub {
# ...
};
solutions = {
# Give each solution a short name. This is what you'd use to
# override its settings, and it shows in (some) error messages.
profile = {
# the only *required* arguments are the 3 below
# Specify 1 or more $out-relative script paths. Unlike many
# builders, resholvePackage modifies the output files during
# fixup (to correctly resolve in-package sourcing).
scripts = [ "bin/shellswain.bash" ];
# "none" for no shebang, "${bash}/bin/bash" for bash, etc.
interpreter = "none";
# packages resholve should resolve executables from
inputs = [ bashup-events44 ];
};
};
makeFlags = [ "prefix=${placeholder "out"}" ];
inherit doCheck;
checkInputs = [ shellcheck ];
# ...
}
Options
resholvePackage
maps Nix types/idioms into the flags and environment variables
that the resholve
CLI expects. Here's an overview:
Option | Type | Containing |
---|---|---|
scripts | list | $out-relative string paths to resolve |
inputs | list | packages to resolve executables from |
interpreter | string | 'none' or abspath for shebang |
prologue | file | text to insert before the first code-line |
epilogue | file | text to isnert after the last code-line |
flags | list | strings to pass as flags |
fake | attrset | directives |
fix | attrset | directives |
keep | attrset | directives |
Controlling resolution with directives
In order to resolve a script, resholve will make you disambiguate how it should handle any potential problems it encounters with directives. There are currently 3 types:
fake
directives tell resholve to pretend it knows about an identifier such as a function, builtin, external command, etc. if there's a good reason it doesn't already know about it. Common examples:- builtins for a non-bash shell
- loadable builtins
- platform-specific external commands in cross-platform conditionals
fix
directives give resholve permission to fix something that it can't safely fix automatically. Common examples:- resolving commands in aliases (this is appropriate for standalone scripts that use aliases non-interactively--but it would prevent profile/rc scripts from using the latest current-system symlinks.)
- resolve commands in a variable definition
- resolve an absolute command path from inputs as if it were a bare reference
keep
directives tell resholve not to raise an error (i.e., ignore) something it would usually object to. Common examples:- variables used as/within the first word of a command
- pre-existing absolute or user-relative (~) command paths
- dynamic (variable) arguments to commands known to accept/run other commands
NOTE: resholve has a (growing) number of directives detailed in
man resholve
vianixpkgs.resholve
.
Each of these 3 types is represented by its own attrset, where you can think of the key as a scope. The value should be:
true
for any directives that the resholve CLI accepts as a single word- a list of strings for all other options
This will hopefully make more sense when you see it. Here are CLI examples from the manpage, and the Nix equivalents:
# --fake 'f:setUp;tearDown builtin:setopt source:/etc/bashrc'
fake = {
# fake accepts the initial of valid identifier types as a CLI convienience.
# Use full names in the Nix API.
function = [ "setUp" "tearDown" ];
builtin = [ "setopt" ];
source = [ "/etc/bashrc" ];
};
# --fix 'aliases xargs:ls $GIT:gix'
fix = {
# all single-word directives use `true` as value
aliases = true;
xargs = [ "ls" ];
"$GIT" = [ "gix" ];
};
# --keep 'which:git;ls .:$HOME $LS:exa /etc/bashrc ~/.bashrc'
keep = {
which = [ "git" "ls" ];
"." = [ "$HOME" ];
"$LS" = [ "exa" ];
"/etc/bashrc" = true;
"~/.bashrc" = true;
};